If you expect to get the promised benefits of lean manufacturing, employees need to understand the vision and behaviours necessary to get there. Without that, your improvement efforts will fall short. With an empowering lean culture, employees can be proactive, energized, and drive rapid continuous improvements, bringing in dramatic bottom-line results.
Companies that have successfully instilled a lean culture consistently realize:
More innovative, team-directed solutions
Lower employee turnover
Better success at sustaining improvements
Greater numbers of improvement actions
Experts estimate that 80 percent of becoming a lean enterprise is culture related. An organization’s culture dictates how people work, their attitudes toward work and change, their relationships with each other and management, and the way change is introduced, embraced and tackled. Culture is a driver of company health. Any company that wants to make sustainable improvements can benefit from a lean culture.
Having a lean culture means several things; among them is that the company encourages employees to actively seek and act on solutions to problems. To have a lean culture, companies need commitment from the top. Management needs a clear vision of how they want to grow their business. This will help translate the vision so people understand how they can support it.
Employee turnover costs companies between 25 percent and 150 percent of that employee’s annual compensation, according to the National Institutes of Standards and Technology (NIST). Companies cannot afford to accept turnover as a fact of life. Many organizations fail to involve everyone in continuous improvement. This is a serious mistake that will cripple a lean transformation.
A few improvements make a big difference; employees are excited about initiating change in the company. People are more a part of the team, and they are more involved in making suggestions and decisions. People are full of great ideas and will see the benefits of improvement, not only for the company but also for themselves.
Manufacturing companies experiencing turnover problems shouldn’t hesitate to do something about them. Turnover is costly, and if you can keep your employees at work and keep them happy, it is a big plus. Companies will experience a decrease in turnover expenses in a short period of time.
Lean culture also improves morale. Fixing this problem is difficult but important because improvement projects go nowhere without employee support. Employees need camaraderie with their co-workers, and complaining about work is something that can bring them closer together because they are sharing the same experiences. As we conduct Kaizen events and training, we almost always see that people have a natural tendency to grumble. Once you get them working on solutions, they have less to complain about and the morale improves.
A lean culture encourages employees to make suggestions and changes in the company, empowering employees to take control and ownership of their work and make it better. Employees care about their work, their co-workers, and their workplace. Consequently, the company sees improved morale.


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